Award-Winning Private Trigonometry Tutoring in Milwaukee, WI

Email AddressPhone Number *Zip Code *Do not enter anything in this field

Info & Prices Emailed

Private In-Home and Online Trigonometry Tutoring in Milwaukee, WI

Receive personally tailored Trigonometry lessons from exceptional tutors in a one-on-one setting. We help you connect with in-home and online tutoring that offers flexible scheduling and your choice of locations.

Featured by

Tutors have attended

100% Tutor Satisfaction Guarantee

How can a Trigonometry tutor help you?

Trigonometry is a field of study that delves into the relationships between triangles and angles. It may sound simple; however, there are many skills your child may need to develop. It calls for a combination of analytical thinking, mathematical skills, and a thorough understanding of each of the concepts it encompasses. There are many applications for trigonometry, including astronomy, art, baseball, and architecture. Your child may need to be able to retain a wide range of computations, such as SOH-CAH-TOA, to be able to succeed. Personalized trigonometry tutoring is available in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, that may provide your child with the best line of support for his or her course material.

An expert trigonometry tutor in Milwaukee may help you develop a study plan to make the best use of your child's time. Varsity Tutors may assist you in connecting with an excellent instructor for your child based on a combination of traits, such as his or her learning style, strengths and weaknesses, previous instruction, and aptitude level. Your hand-selected tutor may quickly assess your child's needs to draft a flexible plan that is able to focus on the concepts he or she is struggling to grasp.

The tutor who is chosen for you is thoroughly vetted for their knowledge, skill, and track record. Each tutor has a solid understanding of his or her subject and may teach to various learning styles. Many use their knowledge in their professional and daily lives. Your child may work with a professional who understands the applications of trigonometry and also knows how to make sure that your child may learn trigonometry in a way that is intuitive to them.

Trigonometry covers a wide breadth of topics. Your child's tutor won't make him or her study them all. Instead, the study plan may cover the concepts your child needs to learn, allowing them to optimize their study time. Since all the sessions are held on a one-to-one level, your child is free to take his or her time with each concept, and ask as many questions as is necessary to fully understand it all.

Each session may be scheduled as you please. You may arrange for trigonometry tutoring in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, at your own home or anywhere else of your choosing. In addition, you may request face-to-face online sessions.

Recent Tutoring Session Reviews

★★★★★

"Reviewed through all aspects of vectors (unit vectors, force equilibrium, boat/airplane/wind problems, cross products, dot products, areas of parallelograms, 3D graphing, and more). Practiced through the concepts of each problem type and went over the intuition of parallelepiped volume and plane equations."

★★★★★

"The student has an exam this Friday, so we went over all topics that we have covered dealing with functions and sequences. She definitely understands the subject, but is unsure of herself. We reviewed all important formulas and I told her that when she receives her test, she should write all formulas at the top of the page. I also went over some common patterns with exponents, which is a topic that confuses her. I told the student that she should write those patterns on the top of the page as well (-1^n, 2^n, 3^n, 1/2^n) so if she gets confused with a pattern, she could check those to see if one of those patterns fits."

"Tonight, the student and I practiced inverse trig relations and functions. The student quickly got the hang of the difference between the two. To help the student keep from confusing them in the future, I drew up a chart for him of the regular trig functions, inverse trig relations, and inverse trig functions with their respective domains and ranges."

★★★★

"We reviewed and wrote out the work for the quiz on inverse trig relations that the student took last session. We then went through the next section on unit circle and trig function relation to the unit circle. Included within the section were problems and an assignment on filling in blanks on a unit circle."

★★★★★

"Today's session with the student went very well. We worked on reviewing trigonometry because she is allowed to retake one exam and that was her worst all year. It covered sine, cosine, graphing, solving complex identities. I did see her last exam and she did very well. We did the three corrections for the exam and she understood where she made her mistakes. I talked with her mother and she contacted her professor to get more practice problems for the student so that she could review the topic more."

★★★★

"The student is starting a new semester in trigonometry. We made it through two sections involving vectors. We translated vectors between Cartesian and polar coordinates, added and subtracted them, and applied them to real-world compass problems. "

★★★★★

"During this session, the student and I focused on learning basic trig functions of sin, cos, and tan, and how they relate to right triangles. We then reviewed how to use trig functions to find an unknown side or angle of a right triangle and how to apply this method to reality based word problems. I then helped guide him though the long homework assignment on trig based word problems that his teacher had assigned. The student seemed to be very comfortable by the end of the assignment."

★★★★★

"After the English exam, we took a short break and studied Trig for his midterm on Tuesday. He powered through the practice set that I gave him. He did the first 20 questions of a 60 question practice set, and he got all the questions right. I will have to review undefined fractions and combining fractions with variables with him tomorrow."

★★★★

"Algebra II/Trig assessment test review, SOH CAH TOA, Law of Sines, Law of Cosines, Amplitude, period, frequency, vertical, and horizontal translations of trig graphs, equation of a circle, solving algebraic inequalities, imaginary numbers,
Some more review of the prep book will help this student prepare for the Trig exams this week!
"

★★★★

"The student and I went over trigonometric functions and identities. Primarily, I taught him how to construct the unit circle and use it to solve trigonometric functions. I also showed him how to identify various trig properties and get them to look like other trig functions. Finally, we covered trigonometric functions using triangles by applying the Pythagorean theorem. He had some problems from the book to work on at home."

★★★★

"Today we worked on getting the student organized. He worked on some assignments. He also decided that that an agenda is going to be the easiest way for him to keep track of his assignments. I will continue to check and make sure he is using the agenda. "

★★★★

"The student has a test coming up this week over the first chapter on Trig. We spent most of the time reviewing. I reminded him how to convert between degrees (decimal or degree-minute-second) and radians. We also talked about arc length and circumference. Then we worked practice problems on these concepts and moved on to evaluating trig functions of given angles measures (degree and radian). He's gotten a lot more comfortable with the unit circle, both having it memorized and being able to use it to answer questions. Then we moved on the harder conceptual questions like how the angle's quadrant affects the signs of the trig functions, and also the range of inverse trig functions when using a calculator (it will only give you one of the answers, but there are typically two - you have to figure out which one is right). As usual he catches on quickly and asks really good questions. I think he'll do very well on his test. "